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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Enchanted Vagabonds
Dana & Ginger are emeritus of the Los Angeles Adverturers Club. You'll be burning the midnight oil without being aware of time itself. Any Tristan Jones fans will love a back seat in this boat. Also, be sure to read the Lambs' companion book, "Search for the Lost City." ENJOY THE TRIP!
Published on October 29, 2000

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A highwayscribery "Book Report"
"Enchanted Vagabonds" written by Dana Lamb is published by the Long Riders' Guild Press, which has dedicated itself to reproducing books from something called the Equestrian Travel Classics. These are books that have fallen from mass distribution with the passing of time, but which the publishers feel "remain of global interest and importance."

"Enchanted...
Published on April 22, 2009 by Stephen Siciliano


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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Enchanted Vagabonds, October 29, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Enchanted Vagabonds (Audio Cassette)
Dana & Ginger are emeritus of the Los Angeles Adverturers Club. You'll be burning the midnight oil without being aware of time itself. Any Tristan Jones fans will love a back seat in this boat. Also, be sure to read the Lambs' companion book, "Search for the Lost City." ENJOY THE TRIP!
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Adventure/Survival Tale is a Classic, July 31, 2004
This review is from: Enchanted Vagabonds (Paperback)
I love true to life adventure/survival tales. This book, Enchanted Vagabonds, is a classic in every sense: it is novel, well written and inspiring. A young couple dreams an adventure, takes the adventure and realizes that you do not take a trip, it takes you.

If you love true life survival/adventure stories you will love this well told tale about sailing/paddling a 16 foot craft down the Pacific side of the Americas in the 1930's.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A highwayscribery "Book Report", April 22, 2009
This review is from: Enchanted Vagabonds (Paperback)
"Enchanted Vagabonds" written by Dana Lamb is published by the Long Riders' Guild Press, which has dedicated itself to reproducing books from something called the Equestrian Travel Classics. These are books that have fallen from mass distribution with the passing of time, but which the publishers feel "remain of global interest and importance."

"Enchanted Vagabonds," a 414-page opus of dense reading and no plot to speak of, involves a journey made by Lamb and his wife Ginger in the thick of the great depression. Friends from childhood in then-agricultural Orange County (Southern California) Ginger and Dana had dreams of adventure. Having little to lose, they set out from San Diego in a canoe/sailboat of their own engineering, for the Panama Canal.

The sojourn took three years and it is a tale most engrossing, especially for those who hunger to know of an earlier world before crowding, pollution, modernization, and the mass endangerment of nature's many species of plants and animals.

It is of special interest to Southern Californians of the surfing variety for its early chapters dealing with the Baja California peninsula, which today (and thanks to its ruggedness and inhospitality) remains a kind of last frontier for those seeking raw territory to discover and roam.

Revealing indeed is this portrait of a Mexico largely unsettled and a nation only in name. As they make their way down the Pacific coast of the great country, each stop into port represents a sampling of Indian/indigenous life almost unspoiled by the sullying hand of European culture.

More often than not these Indian villages welcome the sensitive and sensible travelers with open arms, grand fiestas, and kind treatment; treatment that on a few occasions represents the difference between life and death for the lusty and ingenuous adventurers.

Stricken with malaria in the jungle, mad with fever to the point of delirium, the couple awaken many weeks later in a village that has taken them in and assumed the difficult task of curing and nurturing them back to life. The difference between depression-era America and the pre-Columbian ways of the Indians marks the couple so that, as Lamb puts it, "we no longer fit in to the picture" (of modern life).

The Indians are not friendly at every turn, and particularly along a stretch of inland seas the couple must traverse to avoid death at the hands of powerful "norther" wind storms, they are hounded by a violent and malevolent tribe known as the Mareños.

The Mexican government had, at this point in time, tried to subjugate these scoundrels with an army that never made it back. And so you get an idea of the danger they faced.

So virgin is the country that the couple, on wayward ventures inland and on foot, discover lost and forbidden cities of pyramids and altars for human sacrifice. Throughout their trek, the couple is confronted with a, "strange throbbing rhythm. You felt it even more than you heard it. It was like a nerve beat. It seemed to permeate the air. We were never entirely able to dismiss the effect of this vibration upon our minds and bodies, for we were to hear it many, many times in months to come. We can offer no explanation as to what it was, where it came from, or who produced it. We called it drums for want of another name, but we do not know."

The psychology of these two discoverers reveals much of what has changed in the human psyche and in the soul of nature in the 70 years. Their behavior is more akin to safari hunters than that of the modern day eco-tourist. When floating through the Sea of Cortez surrounded by hundreds of giant manta rays, Lamb gets it into his head to harpoon one. Later on, in a lagoon, he does the same to an alligator. In such instances, Mother Nature strikes back and the adventures become more akin to misadventures. Along the way they shoot tigers, ocelots, jaguars and anything else that gets in their way. On the Island of Cocos off Costa Rica, they clean their camp by leaving the refuse out in anticipation of the tides that will be carrying it away.

They are inhabiting a time and space where nature still rules, where man is far from indomitable, and "natural" resources are so abundant as to overwhelm and threaten human life.

Trouble with the Indians is met with the white man's friend, the gun. Carefully planned ambushes of tribes that have it out for them are replete with powerful gun battles and although there is never once a body count, one gets the impression a few natives must have been felled along the way.

Kind and sensible when met with kindness or mild distrust, the couple are capable of matching violence with violence.

Many times they are in hell with endless strange insects that inflame and scar their skin and infect them with illnesses that threaten their very survival.

Other times, they are in paradise as this time when, after pulling themselves onto a beach to set up camp, Lamb goes for a little walk:

"I took both guns - Ginger's automatic in case I should sight small game, and the Luger in the event of a tiger - and my new machete, and hacked my way towards a group of palms I had seen from the sea. Cutting through the last string of brush to the palm grove, I came upon a beautiful blue lagoon. I gazed in wonder. Tired and hungry as I was, I forgot everything else for the moment. This was the 'Promised Land.' A little fresh-water stream ran into the lagoon, and across it tall coco palms lined a white sand beach. Ducks floated in the water. Great blue herons, snowy egrets, sandpipers, and shorebirds were everywhere. Parrots, and other birds with gorgeous plumage whose names I did not know, flew overhead. Fish made rainbow arcs of color as they leapt and splashed. It was a scene whose beauty made me doubt the evidence of my own eyes."

Here they meet a pair of "Azteco" Indians, relatives to the ancient Aztecs, who help them establish a hut and teach them how to live off the rich land surrounding. They stay for a number of months. The Indians tell them of a "Forbidden City" their tribe is sworn to protect.

Despite an old tale, pregnant with warning, of a Spanish army that entered the surrounding land never to return, the couple decide to search for the forbidden city and ultimately find it, replete with mounds hiding pyramids, protective walls and a limestone sacrificial altar upon which they set up camp and start a fire.

"The effect of such an experience is indescribable. We seemed to have brushed aside times' limitations. The past and present were telescoped. The mind was able to recapture images as though it were not subject to the restrictions of space and matter. I do not tell you that what we saw with our physical eyes, or heard with our finite ears, these evocations of the past. It was rather an awareness not dependent upon either of these usual instruments of sense perception.

"We sat utterly still. The silence was broken only by the sharp staccato of the fire's explosions; then, far off, insistent, vibrant, that rhythmic monotone."

Lamb was an intelligent observer who renders the landscape of Mexico masterfully. The many descriptions of the troubles had at sea in their undersized "Vagabunda" can be a bit too detailed and lose those who don't possess a command of boating terminology (the jib, stern, starboard, etc.) or a full vocabulary of the sea's behavior (squalls, shoals, breakers, etc.). Were this a novel, one or two harrowing sequences upon the violent seas would have been sufficient, but Lamb is writing a travelogue and diary, so that these must be recorded, sometimes at the expense of a patient reader.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Great Adventure, I Hope Its True, January 11, 2005
This review is from: Enchanted Vagabonds (Paperback)
I've been trying to find more about Dana and Ginger Lamb. I would like to know more of their experience and backgrounds before attempting this expedition as young recent college graduates in 1933.
The adventures they experience as they canoe the coast of Mexico, Baja, and Central America from San Diego to Panama are truly absorbing. For three years, they manage to survive malaria, apparent snake bite, insects, tiger and wild boar attack, getting lost in caves, storms at sea in their canoe, attack by primitive tribes, etc.. All this as they "live off the land" without much more than a gun, tent, minimal medical supplies, very little money, and their wits.
For two adventurers that should have a great deal of wilderness survival knowledge and experience, they rather stupidly, get themselves into many dangerous situations that beg the question "why would they do that?" I have to say I believe many of their adventures are exaggerated. I am also curious about the historical and archeological significance of the ancient cities and pyramids they discover in the "Forbidden Land".
All this said, if only half true, their story is incredibly interesting, more so because the wilderness and primitive cultures they experience occur in relatively recent times,1932-1935, and in areas of Mexico and Central America that today are main stream tourist destinations.
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5.0 out of 5 stars A thrill a minute, May 26, 2009
By 
B. Powell "powell789" (Tiburon, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Enchanted Vagabonds (Paperback)
I started this book somewhat reluctantly, but by the first chapter I was hooked. The writing style is matter-of-fact, yet their adventures and misadventures are a thrill a minute. Scarcely a page goes by where they are not faced with great peril. Some of the plot twists could not have been better invented in a work of fiction.

This book will keep you glued to its pages, and when it is over, wishing for more.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Enchanted Vagabonds, November 11, 2008
This review is from: Enchanted Vagabonds (Hardcover)
Old, but interesting story of a couple, who conoed the western coast of Mexico in the 1930's.
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2.0 out of 5 stars Enchanted Vagabonds, July 26, 2008
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This review is from: Enchanted Vagabonds (Paperback)
This first adventure book by Dana and Ginger Lamb describes how they sailed, paddled, towed and hacked their way in a custom-built canoe/sailboat through open seas, estuaries, lagoons and mangrove swamps -- from San Diego to Panama in the early part of last century. The book has a melodramatic flare, perhaps due to the era it was written: Nearly every day of their 3 years is fraught with high seas, gales, pounding surf, murderous locals, malarial mosquitoes or killer ticks entirely covering their bodies -- and always a crafty or miraculous escape (except from malaria). Although there are respites describing friendly, hospitable "natives" they meet along the way, this was a disappointment after reading their later Quest for the Lost City, a better-written book in which they describe how they walked and camped from San Diego to southern Mexico and then spent month upon month exploring the jungles bordering Mexico and Guatemala.
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5.0 out of 5 stars a relevant classic, December 11, 2007
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This review is from: Enchanted Vagabonds (Paperback)
I found a first edition of this book at a thrift store and have really enjoyed it. I'm happy to see that it's still in print!

It's a book about adventure that will keep you reading as well as an interesting view of rural mexico in the 1930s.

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Enchanted Vagabonds
Enchanted Vagabonds by Dana Lamb (Audio Cassette - December 1, 1984)
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